David Wilson wrote: > Sorry Bruce this seems to make a bit more difficult.
To make it even more complicated (but maybe not) -- American lawyers in most of their works (be it pleading to the court or scholarly writing -- BTW, I think that for US lawyers could well developed bibliography management make OOo killing feature which would make them switch from WordPerfect (finally :-)) have something they call Table of Authorities. It is some mixture between table of contents (and legal texts having ToA have ToC as well), index and list of references. Basically it lists all references (cases, regulations, laws, legal journals, and anything else) which is used in the text as an authority. Whole list is divided into categories for each type of reference. Some examples of how to do it (with Word or WordPerfect): * http://www.addbalance.com/usersguide\ /complex_documents.htm#Table%20of%20Authorities * http://www.law.berkeley.edu/library/computing/toa.pdf * http://www.microcounsel.com/BRIDGE86.HTM * http://www.u.arizona.edu/~llanger/table_of_authorities.htm Some examples of how it does look * http://www.lambdalegal.org/binary-data/LAMBDA_PDF/pdf/357.pdf (see page iii) * http://www.epic.org/free_speech/censorware/cyberpatrol/ct_app_brief.pdf (see page iv, but formatting is IMHO weird). Just food for thoughts, Matej -- Matej Cepl, http://www.ceplovi.cz/matej/blog/ GPG Finger: 89EF 4BC6 288A BF43 1BAB 25C3 E09F EF25 D964 84AC Some cause happiness wherever they go; others whenever they go. -- Oscar Wilde --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]